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The Winston-Salem Journal, started by Charles Landon Knight, began publishing in the afternoons on April 3, 1897. The area's other newspaper, the Twin City Sentinel, also was an afternoon paper. Knight moved out of the area and the Journal had several owners before publisher D.A. Fawcett made it a morning paper starting January 2, 1902.
Brinson worked as an editorial page editor and book review editor for the Winston-Salem Journal and as a writer for Wake Forest Magazine. [9] [2] [10] In 1970, as a journalist for Wake Forest Magazine, Carter interviewed Edward Reynolds, who was the first African-American undergraduate from Wake Forest University.
The Twin-City Sentinel was the name of the afternoon newspaper published in Winston-Salem, North Carolina. The Sentinel ' s masthead was dropped in 1985 when operations were absorbed into its sister paper, the morning Winston-Salem Journal. Twin City derived from the fact that Winston and Salem began as separate cities.
Virginia Newell, math professor at Winston-Salem State University and alderman of Winston-Salem; Len Preslar, business educator and Distinguished Professor of Practice at Wake Forest University; Florence Wells Slater, entomologist and schoolteacher [2] Norman Adrian Wiggins, president of Campbell University
John S. Carroll was born in New York City on January 23, 1942, to Wallace Carroll, the editor and publisher of the Winston-Salem Journal and Sentinel, and the former Margaret Sawyer. The family lived in Winston-Salem, North Carolina , until John was about 13, when they moved to Washington, D.C., where his father began working with the New York ...
The magazine is distributed within the U.S. Weekend Edition of The Wall Street Journal newspaper (paid print circulation for the Weekend edition is approximately 2.2 million), and is available on WSJ.com. Each issue is also available throughout the month in The Wall Street Journal's iPad app.
Wallace Carroll was born in Milwaukee, Wisconsin, on December 5, 1906, to John Francis Carroll and Josephine Meyer Carroll.After graduating from Marquette University in 1928 he was hired by United Press in Chicago; six months later he was transferred to London and two years later to Paris to work as a foreign correspondent for the news service. [4]
The following year the printing of the paper was moved to Winston-Salem, the location of the BH Media-owned Winston-Salem Journal. [ 1 ] "[F]ew print dailies, at least in North Carolina, have cut their way to irrelevance as brazenly as the News & Record has under BH Media and current owner Lee Enterprises.